Authors: Donald Miller
ISBN-13: 9780785263715, ISBN-10: 0785263713
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Nelson, Thomas, Inc.
Date Published: October 2004
Edition: (Non-applicable)
In 2005 Donald Miller started The Mentoring Project, an organization that helps churches start mentoring programs and pairs mentors with boys in need. Don's work with the fatherless led the Obama administration to invite him onto the president's task force on fatherlessness and mentoring. Donald is the director of The Burnside Writers Collective, an online magazine. He is a frequent speaker, appearing at events such as the Women of Faith Conference, The Democratic National Convention, and Harvard University. He still lives in Portland, Oregon with his dog Lucy
New York Times best-selling author Donald Miller explores the origin and meaning of redemption in this fully revised and redesigned bestseller.
Hysterically funny, wryly provocative, and disquietingly insightful, Searching for God Knows What invites readers to examine their deep need for redemption, to feel it, know it, and live like it is true in their lives.
Miller weaves phenomenal characters and true-to-life spectacles into his acclaimed memoir style to enrich, inspire, entertain, and ultimately challenge readers to see life in a new way. He shows that one of the greatest desires of every person is the desire for redemption, to have brokenness repaired. Instead of the chaotic relationships, self-hatred, wreckless consumerism, and anxiety that overrun a life without redemption, Miller uncovers the beauty and power of the Gospel to fulfill one of our deepest needs.
Miller, author of Blue Like Jazz, serves as campus ministry leader at Reed College. His writing voice is casual and somewhat eccentric, while his theories-largely derived from experience rather than extensive study-are at times brilliant, at times questionable and rarely supported by outside sources. The book covers a great deal of territory: Miller's walking away from God as a teenager and returning to his faith; the competitive nature of human relationships, painfully demonstrated through junior high memories; the meaning of morality and religion; the essence of true Christianity. But Miller's main theme is dissatisfaction with the way Christianity is taught and practiced. He says the religion ought not to be presented as a formula, its tenets broken down into bullet points to fit modern Western thought patterns. At its heart, Miller argues, Christianity is relationship. Interested people should be presented with biblical stories rather than steps to salvation. Miller also believes that many Christians behave correctly but their actions lack meaning: "The tough thing about Christian spirituality is, you have to mean things. You can't just go through the motions or act religious for the wrong reasons... this thing is a thing of the heart." However, Miller offers only faint suggestions to replace the formulaic or systematic approach to faith that he denounces. (Oct. 14) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Author's Note | ix | |
Chapter 1 | Fine Wine: The Failure of Formulas | 1 |
Chapter 2 | Impostors: Santa Takes a Leak | 17 |
Chapter 3 | Feet of Trees: What Do We Really Want? | 35 |
Chapter 4 | Free Verse: A Whole Message to a Whole Human Being | 49 |
Chapter 5 | Naked: Why Nudity Is the Point | 61 |
Chapter 6 | Children of Chernobyl: Why Did God Leave? | 75 |
Chapter 7 | Adam, Eve, and the Alien: How the Fall Makes You Feel | 91 |
Chapter 8 | Lifeboat Theory: How to Kill Your Neighbor | 105 |
Chapter 9 | Jesus: Who Needs a Boat? | 119 |
Chapter 10 | The Gospel of Jesus: It Never Was a Formula | 151 |
Chapter 11 | A Circus of Redemption: Why a Three-Legged Man Is Better Than a Bearded Woman | 165 |
Chapter 12 | Morality: Why I Am Better Than You | 179 |
Chapter 13 | Religion: A Public Relations Campaign for God | 197 |
Chapter 14 | The Gospel of Jesus: Why William Shakespeare Was a Prophet | 215 |
Afterword | 233 | |
About the Author | 235 | |
Acknowledgments | 237 | |
Sample from Blue Like Jazz | 241 |